The legendary Nikonos was created by Cousteau and Wouters in the 60s. Built for submarine photography, it could stand a Kraken's bite. Later, Nikon turned it into an SLR. But this US Navy SEAL's camera wasn't an ordinary Nikonos.

This Nikonos was a total mystery. A secret that not many people knew about until recently. In fact, its existence was repeatedly denied by the manufacturer, even after the US Navy published this photo, showing a member of SEAL Team One equipped with one and the following caption:

A digital Nikonos? Nobody had a digital Nikonos. Digital Nikonos just don't exist. They didn't exist in 1998 and they never ever existed. Nikon never manufactured them. In fact, Nikon cancelled the Nikonos in 2001, three years after this photo was taken.

So what the hell is this "digital camera which can send real time digital images to decision makers"? It is a Nikonos, but with different guts, modified by Eastman Kodak Company Commercial & Goverment Systems. The model name was the DCS 425 M, a black and white DSLR made for the military. According to Jarle Aasland—who investigated the origin of the puzzling beast—Kodak officially denies their existence:

I'm sorry but those cameras never existed here at Eastman Kodak. We never made cameras for that specific use. The information you have is incorrect.

Jarle's information wasn't incorrect, however. It was later confirmed by Jim McGarvey, Kodak's lead engineer on the DCS cameras who said that the division would take commercial camera designs to adapt them for special needs in limited runs.

It's too bad that Nikon cancelled the Nikonos. Not only it is a beautiful camera that requires no casing for diving, but it's a perfect camera to take into any environment with no protection needed whatsoever. [Nikonos via Nikon Rumors]